Greater New Orleans

U.S. retailers report solid gains for August

Shoppers remained resilient in August despite wild stock market swings and worries about the U.S. economy, resulting in what's winding up to be a respectable back-to-school shopping season for many merchants. However, the impact of Hurricane Irene, which ploughed through the Carolinas and up the Eastern Seaboard last weekend, hurt business for merchants, particularly clothing retailers. Retailers are still hoping to recoup lost sales in the next few weeks.

Pat Wellenbach, The Associated PressIn this Aug. 17, 2011 photo, the Gap storefront is seen in Freeport, Maine. Retailers are reporting solid revenue gains for August, capping what's winding up to be a solid back-to-school season despite wild stock market swings and worries about the economy. But Gap Inc. posted a bigger-than-expected drop.

The results measuring sales at stores open at least a year are considered a key indicator of a retailer's health.

"Retailers weathered a number of storms to turn into what's expected to be a solid back-to-school and August selling season," said Ken Perkins, president of Research Limited LLC. "September will be interesting. The first half should be good but the second half could be sluggish." He said beyond buying clothing and supplies for their children, families don't have any "driving reason to spend."

"If the economy continues to teeter, the vast majority will keep their wallets tight," he added.

Target's revenue at stores open at least a year climbed 4.1 percent in August, driven by back-to-school and back-to-college shopping. The results topped Wall Street's forecast.

Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters predicted a 3.5 percent increase.

Macy's Inc. had a 5 percent gain in revenue at stores opened at least a year. Analysts were expected a 4.5 percent increase.

But J.C. Penney had a 1.9 percent decline, below the 0.8 percent increase that analysts were expecting. Kohl's also posted a 1.9 percent decline, below the 1.6 percent increase that Wall Street expected.

On Wednesday, Costco Wholesale Corp. reported that its revenue from stores open at least a year climbed 11 percent in August, beating Wall Street's expectations. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters predicted the figure would rise 9.3 percent for the warehouse club operator.